When I said that CXO's wouldn't give Google Chrome a nanosecond's thought, I under-estimated. They'll give it about five seconds and then pass straight to the corporate legal department. Why? EULA ...
Google's new web browser Chrome is fast, shiny, and requires users to sign their very lives over to Google before they can use it. Today's Internet outrage du jour has been Chrome's EULA, which ...
Google has responded with haste to the huge outcry about a section in Chrome‘s EULA that gives Google “a perpetual, irrevocable, worldwide, royalty-free, and non-exclusive license” to do all kinds of ...
Floating around Twitter and Tumblr the past day or so has been the rather restrictive EULA that Google has in place for its Chrome Web browser. People were freaking out, as they do so often in today’s ...
Google has responded with haste to the huge outcry about a section in Chrome's EULA that gives Google "a perpetual, irrevocable, worldwide, royalty-free, and non-exclusive license" to do all kinds of ...
Following up on yesterday’s coverage, Google’s now claiming that the egregious wording in the end user license agreement for its new Chrome browser was ‘all a big mistake’ and that the company is: ...
National Health Service uses AI tool to analyse brain CT scans, and determine the severity of the patient’s condition. Conversations in which the user exhibits “acute distress” will be routed to more ...
It turns out that Google's Chrome, like Google's Apps, started life with the same ridiculous EULA, the one that gives GOOG the right to use any content you send to Chrome (and Apps as well) in any way ...
As regular readers already know, I’ve covered Google’s new Chrome browser quite a bit in the last week-plus: Google Chrome: Tomorrow The Cloud, Today The Cellphone Google Chrome: EULA Backpeddles, ...
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